Antenna wire for SSB
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			"Wet-n-Wild Bill"  wrote in 
: 
 
 I forgot to mention that the boat is all metal (aluminum).  You stated 
 that the strap should be short! my intent is to place the tuner three 
 to four feet from the antenna and mount it exposed to the elements on 
 the roof. 
 
That would require the use of standoff insulators to hold the strap, even 
insulated wire steadily away from the metal hull.  If the wire is 
flopping around, moving back and forth near the metal hull, it will 
constantly detune then tune then detune the antenna, especially on some 
frequencies where the impedance at the bottom of the whip is high.  The 
tuning solution needs to be fairly stable, so the wire needs to be 
stable. 
 
 
 Any problems other than Dacron Guywires need  when mounting on an 
 aluminum roof?  Also on near by will be other RF cables for Weather 
 Fax and VHF, where as my GPS and Radar are 14' away! 
 
Don't let the wire from the tuner to the antenna anywhere near any other 
antennas.  If it must be near other coaxial cables, these cables need 
their shields bonded to the hull as soon as they go inside the boat to 
prevent the outside of the coaxial shield from becoming an HF antenna, 
leading the transmitter's RF right into the connector on the equipment. 
Bonding is simple, out of the weather.  Skin off a small ring of the 
coax's outer plastic shield, wrap some wire around the outside of the 
coax's braided shield, then ground that to the nearest screw into the 
metal hull.  This will drain off the RF at that point to hull ("ground") 
so it doesn't follow the outside of the shield to the equipment the coax 
belongs to. 
 
Best would be small plate welded to the hull with coaxial connectors 
running through it, those double female through-the-chassis connectors 
with females on either end.  The coax then uses standard coax connectors 
to connect the cut cables to the plate's ground plane.  Mine is a 4X8" 
stainless plate with two U clamps to an 8' ground rod outside my ham 
station.  The RF following the cables down from the antenna, bleeds off 
to the ground rod on one side.  The RF going through the connectors, of 
course, is INSIDE the cable and is unaffected.  The outside of the coax 
going into my house is RF free, now out of the antenna's big field.  This 
is a bigger issue when you're running 1500 watts PEP SSB...(c;  POWER is 
our FRIEND. 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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